Reclaim the TV

Do you:

  • wonder who watches all of the 700+ channels that you get from your cable provider?
  • wonder why you are paying more than $50/month for all those channels, when you only watch a handful?
  • find yourself channel surfing, just because you can, not because you know what you want to watch?
  • feel like you are not getting the most out of your TV?
  • feel like you can’t wait for Google TV or the Boxee box to improve your television experience?

If you answered yes to any of the above questions, I have a few tips for you. There have been times when I spent an hour flipping through channels, not really watching anything in particular, and later feeling like an idiot for having wasted my time. All this while I just accepted that cable TV as a given, an inevitable companion of our internet service provider… until I met a few friends who were perfectly happy without any cable service.

With that inspiration, I started looking around for a better TV experience. There is so much content available online (and good content!) that I wasn’t really worried about lack of material to watch. Both Google TV and the Boxee box seemed very promising (not to mention, the new Apple TV). There were two little problems:

  1. Neither Boxee box nor Google TV are here yet, and
  2. All of these devices have very very limited functionality. They address the problem of Internet TV, but I don’t want to use my TV to just watch TV. I want it to become a hub for all my media. I want to access my local music, photos, videos and more.

So I did what any self-respecting geek would do — I built my own media center PC. It runs Ubuntu; it hosts all my media in a single location; it serves as media server and storage server; and it serves as a compute server when I have to transcode media. You can find all the gory details in this guide: HOWTO Build an Ubuntu based media center.

4 comments

  1. BoredWithCable

    One of the thing the post does not elaborate on is the comment “There is so much content available online (and good content!) “.
    While I would agree to some extent it would be great to see what you have found so far. I guess some of the interest would still remain the same even after getting rid of cable like movies, tv shows, music, news, games,travel stuff,debates and much more .. And I do know that you are a hulu fan so some of that would come from hulu. But I was still wondering if you have managed to get the list of websites/internet apps which provides everything or almost everything that you were interested in when you were using cable tv. And of course you can also write about the stuff that your satisfied friends are watching using internet but no cable.

    Hope to see a follow up post from you about second important stuff after getting rid of cable tv… the content . So I can follow :)

    • Diwaker Gupta

      Between Hulu, Netflix, Boxee and Clicker, I find more than enough content. The last bastion for cable is live events, primarily sports. IMO its just a matter of time before everything moves online. Last year the US open was broadcast live on the internet for free! Hopefully NFL and NBA will follow suit soon. Thanks for your comment — it gives me an incentive for a follow up post :)

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